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Zendesk support: respond to common questions

This section explains what to do in response to common support questions, where there:

  • is not a macro for that situation
  • is a macro, but there are extra are things you need to do before you can send it

If you need information about the Zendesk schedule, process or interface, see the Zendesk best practice slide deck.

I need to reset my password

We have a stock response for this in Zendesk. Use the macro ‘GovWifi - end user - asking for new or existing sign in details’.

Users often ask to reset their password but they do not usually need to do this. If they’ve forgotten or lost their password, they can get a reminder by following the sign up instructions again.

When they email or text us, we can tell if they have a GovWifi account already. If they do, we’ll send their existing username and password in reply.

If a user thinks that their password has been compromised, then we can delete their account. Developers can do this. The user can then sign up to GovWifi again using the same email address.

Can my organisation use GovWifi?

All public sector organisations can offer GovWifi. This means they must be funded or controlled by the UK government.

End users do not have to be from a public sector organisation to create a GovWifi account. However, only people with public sector email addresses can get a username and password via the email sign up route.

We have a register of public sector organisations that organisations need to be on before they can offer GovWifi. We also have a list of approved email domains that a domain needs to be on before a person can use the email sign up route.

These lists are not exhaustive, so sometimes we need to add organisations and domains to these ‘allow lists’ manually.

Check if it’s a public sector organisation

If someone wants to know if their organisation or email domain can use GovWifi, check that it’s a public sector organisation. You can usually tell by Googling it.

If it’s a public sector organisation:

  1. Go to the GovWifi Super admin site.
  2. Go to the ‘allow list’ section.
  3. Follow the steps to add the organisation and its email domain to the allow list.
  4. In Zendesk, select the macro ‘GovWifi - request to add a new email domain’.
  5. Edit the macro - there are 3 possible responses depending on whether the organisation is public sector or not. You need to send the part that confirms the organisation is now approved.

If it’s not a public sector organisation:

  1. In Zendesk, select the macro ‘GovWifi - request to add a new email domain’.
  2. Edit the macro - there are 3 possible responses depending on whether the organisation is public sector or not. You need to send the part that says we cannot approve the organisation.

If you’re not sure:

  1. In Zendesk, select the macro ‘GovWifi - request to add a new email domain’.
  2. Edit the macro - there are 3 possible responses depending on whether the organisation is public sector or not. You need to send the part that asks for more information.
  3. If the person responds and it’s still unclear, copy in the service owner who will take it from there.

Can GovWifi be deployed in privately owned buildings?

If network administrators ask if they can broadcast the GovWifi SSID in privately owned buildings being used for publicly funded services—such as NHS social care facilities or temporary government-related events in private venues—the answer is yes. GovWifi can be deployed in such locations, provided the following criteria are met:

  • The building or location is supporting a service that’s commissioned by a publicly funded organisation (for example, NHS, Local Authority, or Central Government).
  • Existing IP addresses (locations) must be incorporated from an established account.
  • Suppliers must not be granted admin user access
  • The account holders inform the GovWifi team of the address where GW will be broadcasted and duration of the contract with supplier

Ensure the request relates to broadcasting GovWifi in a privately owned building that is being used for publicly funded services (e.g., NHS social care facility, government event in a private venue). Gather any missing information if the context is not clear from the initial request. If permitted: Outline the requirements or processes the requester needs to follow. If not permitted: Explain the reasons and offer alternative options if relevant. If there is uncertainty or the case is unusual, escalate the request to the service/product manager for further advice.

I’m having problems using the internet once connected

If individual users are having problems that are not related to their username and password, it’s probably due to local issues - not GovWifi. This includes:

  • connectivity dropping or slow internet speeds
  • not being able to access certain websites or do specific things on the network

Users with these issues should contact IT support for the building they’re in. The IT team will be able to look for problems with the device or local network.

This is because GovWifi is not a network itself. It’s an authentication layer that sits on top of an organisation’s existing wifi infrastructure. It just appears as a network to end users so they know they can use their username and password to get on the internet. The network is managed by the building’s IT team, who also set the policies for network use.

I need information about a user

If an organisation knows an individual user has done something malicious or breached an acceptable use policy on its network, it can ask for the information we hold about that user.

We have either the email address or phone number of all users with GovWifi accounts.

Before you can provide user information to an organisation:

  1. Go to the Super admins site.
  2. Go to the ‘Team members’ section and check that the request is coming from an admin user at that organisation. Then ‘assume membership’ of requesting org and check within their ‘settings’ for a signed MoU
  3. Go to the ‘Organisations’ section and search the organisation name.
  4. You’ll see a section called ‘MOU’ which will show whether the organisation has signed the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU). The MOU sets out the terms that we share personal data under.

If the organisation has not signed the MOU, go to Zendesk and send the macro response ‘GovWifi - admin user - asking for info about an end user - MOU not signed’. Escalate to the service owner if the organisation has any questions about this.

If it has signed the MOU, you can send them the information.

Can you block a user on our network?

No. If an organisation wants to block a user, its IT team will need to do this locally.

The user will still be able to access the internet using GovWifi in other buildings.

How do I reset my two factor authentication?

Use the macro ‘GovWifi - admin user - reset 2FA’. It explains that if an admin user needs to reset their 2FA:

  1. The admin user can ask a team member to do it for them.
  2. The team member needs to sign into their GovWifi admin account, go to the ‘Team members’ section’ and select ‘Reset 2FA’ next to the user’s name.
  3. The admin user can then follow the link in the email they receive, and follow the instructions to set up 2FA again.

The macro also explains that if this does not work, or if the admin does not have a team member who can do this for them, we have a manual process. This involves us setting up a video call with the admin and asking to see some ID. This is to be sure it’s really them trying to access GovWifi admin. The process document includes more information about how do to this check.

My organisation is having connectivity issues

Use the macro ‘Govwifi - admin user - end users having connection issues’ when an admin users reports connection issues.

If they continue to report issues, use the “Questions for organisations facing RADIUS authentication issues” document to develop a list of questions for the admin user to answer.

The more we know about the issue the better able we are to investigate.

If the organisation is experiencing an incident, regardless of whether the root cause is GovWifi or not, we recommend following the steps outlined in “Helping other organisation incident management teams with their incidents”.

In the logs on the Admin Portal, some Username or ID fields are blank, but show a Status of successful. Why is this?

Blank username and ID fields indicate that users on your networks are authenticating via certificate based authentication (EAP-TLS), versus EAP-PEAP (username/passwords).  Users can do this even though your specific organisation doesn’t have CBA enabled in the Admin Portal. This is part of the service, which allows users to roam regardless of their authentication method.

Sharing network admin contact details when requested

Sometimes, end users or network admins need to contact the team responsible for a Govwifi account but do not have the right contact details. In these cases, we can share the service email addresses of the relevant network admins to help them get in touch.

1. End user cannot find support contact details for their building

If an end user contacts us because they can’t find who to speak to about connecting to GovWifi in their building, provide them with the service email address for the network admin team responsible for that location. Check which network admin team manages the account for the building. Reply to the end user and share the relevant service email address so they can contact the admin team directly.

2. Network admins need to contact admins for an existing Govwifi account

If a network admin is trying to join or merge with another Govwifi account but doesn’t know who manages it, you can share the service email address of the admin team for that account. Identify the existing Govwifi account and confirm the associated admin teams. Share the appropriate service email address so they can discuss merging accounts or combining admin access.

Always:

Only share service (not personal) email addresses. Remind users not to share these contact details publicly.

This page was last reviewed on 15 May 2025. It needs to be reviewed again on 15 November 2025 by the page owner #govwifi .